Examples of Legacy Entities in a sentence
In lieu of and in satisfaction of any severance or other payments due under any severance or other benefit plans maintained by any of the Price Legacy Entities, or any individual agreement previously entered into with the Executive by any of the Price Legacy Entities, including without limitation the Employment Agreement, the Company shall provide the Executive with the payments and benefits set forth in Sections 3(b) through (f) below.
The Executive further understands and acknowledges that despite termination of his employment with the Price Legacy Entities, he has a continuing legal obligation not to disclose, and not to use, directly or indirectly, any such trade secrets or confidential information owned by the Price Legacy Entities.
The Executive further agrees not to make any negative statements, written or oral, to third parties relating to his employment or any aspect of the business of the Price Legacy Entities and not to make any statements, written or oral, to third parties about the circumstances of his resignation, except as may be required by a court or governmental body, or as may merely repeat any of the matters contained in the press release of the Company issued on or about the date hereof.
Neither Legacy Entities nor any of their ERISA Affiliates has incurred or reasonably expects to incur any liability under (i) Title IV of ERISA with respect to termination of, or withdrawal from, any “employee benefit plan” or (ii) Sections 412, 4971, 4975 or 4980B of the Code.
No “single employer plan” (as defined in Section 4001 of ERISA) established or maintained by the Legacy Entities or any of their ERISA Affiliates, if such “employee benefit plan” were terminated, would have any “amount of unfunded benefit liabilities” (as defined under ERISA).
After having suffered a severe financial blow, the Legacy Entities took up the long legal battle of seeking recourse against Superior in an arbitration proceeding.
In his Award, the arbitrator found that Superior’s retaliation was a substantial motivation for Superior’s termination of all its contracts with provider companies owned by me in 2013 (i.e., the Legacy Entities).
None of the Legacy Entities nor any agent thereof acting on their behalf has taken, and none of them will take, any action that might cause this Agreement or the issuance or sale of the Securities to violate Regulation T, Regulation U or Regulation X of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System.
Superior’s conduct in 2013 caused devastation amongst the Legacy Entities and affected thousands of Medicaid patients, many located in the Rio Grande Valley, Corpus Christi[,] and its surrounding areas.
Each “employee benefit plan” established or maintained by the Legacy Entities or any of their ERISA Affiliates that is intended to be qualified under Section 401 of the Code is so qualified and to the knowledge of the Legacy Entities nothing has occurred, whether by action or failure to act, which would cause the loss of such qualification.